Boston Herald

Jones, Patriots can’t keep up with Dolphins in 31-17 loss

Now 2-6 on the season

- By Doug Kyed

MIAMI GARDENS, FLA. >> The Patriots’ hot streak lasted exactly one week before the team turned cold Sunday in muggy South Florida.

The 2-6 Patriots couldn’t keep up with the speedy Dolphins in Week 8’s 3117 intra-division loss. That came after an encouragin­g effort by the Patriots’ offense in their Week 7 win over the Bills.

“As a team, it just wasn’t good enough,” head coach Bill Belichick when asked about quarterbac­k Mac Jones’ performanc­e.

Things actually started relatively promising for the Patriots, who took an early lead off of an intercepti­on from safety Kyle Dugger off of Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa, giving the offense a short field.

After a throwaway and a 6-yard run by running back Rhamondre Stevenson, Jones found Patriots wide receiver Kendrick Bourne in the middle of the field for a 24-yard catch-and-run touchdown.

It took just a little over three minutes for the Dolphins to respond on a sixplay, 75-yard drive that saw Tagvailoa find wide receiver Tyreek Hill zooming downfield with Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson and rookie safety Marte Mapu lagging behind in his tracks on a 42-yard deep touchdown.

The Patriots quickly went three-and-out, losing 11 yards in the process on their ensuing drive before the Dolphins scored again.

This time, the Dolphins plodded down the field on a 14-play, 53-yard drive that culminated with a 1-yard touchdown pass from Tagovailoa to wide receiver Cedric Wilson. Jackson, who was penalized for a relatively soft defensive pass interferen­ce penalty on the drive, was in coverage on that play, as well.

Another promising Patriots offensive drive ended with a Jones intercepti­on on a target to Bourne that was jumped by All-Pro cornerback Jalen Ramsey, returning from injury in his Dolphins debut.

“I knew the coverage, I knew the everything,” Jones said after the game. “I just made a bad throw really late, didn’t really drive it. That’s what happens on that play. The guy either takes it, and it’s a touchdown, or the guy falls off, and that can happen. Can’t do that as a quarterbac­k. Just throw it out of bounds or take the check-down and move on.”

The Dolphins responded with a field goal after an eight-play, 28-yard drive before the Patriots kneeled on the ball to end the half with 26 seconds left on the game clock.

A Dolphins fumble to begin the second half on a muffed handoff from Tagovailoa to running back Raheem Mostert that was scooped up by linebacker Anfernee Jennings gave the Patriots life. Jones and Co. lost a yard before rookie kicker Chad Ryland knocked through a field goal to cut the Dolphins’ lead to 17-10.

The Dolphins, with little resistance from a Patriots defense that lost linebacker Ja’Whaun Bentley to a hamstring injury, went 77 yards on nine plays before Mostert walked into the end zone on a 1-yard touchdown run to make the score 24-10.

The Patriots and Dolphins then exchanged four consecutiv­e punts before Jones ended the scoring drought with a 3-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster, who had entered the game after Bourne was ruled out with a knee injury and DeVante Parker was out with a head ailment. The score, which came after a 13-play, 81-yard drive that saw Jones spread the ball around to tight end Hunter Henry, wide receiver Demario Douglas and Stevenson, cut the Dolphins’ lead to 24-17.

The dagger came with 2:43 left in the game when Tagovailoa found a wideopen Jaylen Waddle in the middle of the field for an easy 31-yard catch-and-run touchdown. The Dolphins sent Hill in motion, and both Jack Jones and Jonathan Jones followed him in coverage, leaving Waddle standing in the middle of the field without a defender in the vicinity.

BEST

S Kyle Dugger: Dugger was everywhere for the Patriots, intercepti­ng a pass, recording a sack and leading the team with seven tackles.

WR Kendrick Bourne: Before leaving the game with a knee injury, Bourne caught three passes on four targets for 36 yards with a touchdown.

DT Christian Barmore: Barmore has had a strong three-week stretch. The 2021 second-round pick registered five tackles and a sack.

WORST

CB J.C. Jackson: The veteran cornerback allowed two touchdowns in Sunday’s loss. He was charged with defensive pass interferen­ce, but it was a pretty ticky-tack flag.

S Marte Mapu: The rookie defender trailed far behind Hill on the Dolphins’ 42-yard touchdown connection. He saw his playing time decrease after the play.

QB Mac Jones: It wasn’t an awful performanc­e from Jones, but the bar is pretty low for the young quarterbac­k this season. He was 19-of-29 for 161 yards with two touchdowns, an intercepti­on and two more near-picks. Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa was 30-of45 for 324 yards with three touchdowns and one intercepti­on.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Miami Dolphins wide receiver Cedrick Wilson Jr. (11) scores a touchdown under pressure from New England Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson (29) during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 29, 2023, in Miami Gardens, Fla.
LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Miami Dolphins wide receiver Cedrick Wilson Jr. (11) scores a touchdown under pressure from New England Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson (29) during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 29, 2023, in Miami Gardens, Fla.

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